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Dembele again voted player of the year in France • ترامب يتعهد بتحقيق “نصر كامل” على إيران • حرب إيران تهدد طموح دول الخليج في تأسيس اقتصاد لا يعتمد على النفط – مقال في واشنطن بوست • Leeds draw leaves Tottenham deep in relegation peril • Children playing with gas cylinder cause fire in Kwara • Olise Wins Award For Best French Player Abroad • South Africa’s Ramaphosa refuses to resign after reinstatement of impeachment proceedings • Tinubu, Aiyedatiwa, Mimiko, Others Eulogise Pa Fasoranti At 100 • Millwall’s curse continues as Mohamed Belloumi sends Hull into Championship playoff final • Calvert-Lewin denies Spurs with Leeds equaliser to leave survival in balance • Dollar to Naira exchange rate today, May 11, 2026: Nigerian currency sustains significant depreciation • 2027: Let’s wait for the election and see – Kwankwaso tells Atiku • Anambra APC expels 30 members for dragging party to court • Insecurity, Poor Network Threaten CVR Exercise In Kebbi – INEC • US rejects UN ‘progress declaration’ on international migration • Mutfwang Assures Farmers Of Security After Fresh Killings In Barkin Ladi • Plateau gov aspirant submits PDP nomination forms • 2027: Why North settled for Peter Obi as most capable ally – Kwankwaso • Kwara PDP begins screening of aspirants Tuesday • ‘Politics is a game, I’m not fighting anybody’ – Kwankwaso explains why he left Atiku in ADC • Dembele again voted player of the year in France • ترامب يتعهد بتحقيق “نصر كامل” على إيران • حرب إيران تهدد طموح دول الخليج في تأسيس اقتصاد لا يعتمد على النفط – مقال في واشنطن بوست • Leeds draw leaves Tottenham deep in relegation peril • Children playing with gas cylinder cause fire in Kwara • Olise Wins Award For Best French Player Abroad • South Africa’s Ramaphosa refuses to resign after reinstatement of impeachment proceedings • Tinubu, Aiyedatiwa, Mimiko, Others Eulogise Pa Fasoranti At 100 • Millwall’s curse continues as Mohamed Belloumi sends Hull into Championship playoff final • Calvert-Lewin denies Spurs with Leeds equaliser to leave survival in balance • Dollar to Naira exchange rate today, May 11, 2026: Nigerian currency sustains significant depreciation • 2027: Let’s wait for the election and see – Kwankwaso tells Atiku • Anambra APC expels 30 members for dragging party to court • Insecurity, Poor Network Threaten CVR Exercise In Kebbi – INEC • US rejects UN ‘progress declaration’ on international migration • Mutfwang Assures Farmers Of Security After Fresh Killings In Barkin Ladi • Plateau gov aspirant submits PDP nomination forms • 2027: Why North settled for Peter Obi as most capable ally – Kwankwaso • Kwara PDP begins screening of aspirants Tuesday • ‘Politics is a game, I’m not fighting anybody’ – Kwankwaso explains why he left Atiku in ADC
PRESS RELEASE: Somalia's Federal Government Reaffirms Right to Peaceful Assembly and Warns Against Violent Political Mobilization
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PRESS RELEASE: Somalia's Federal Government Reaffirms Right to Peaceful Assembly and Warns Against Violent Political Mobilization

Horn Observer 1 day 3 mins read
In order to facilitate the peaceful exercise of this right while protecting public safety and the normal functioning of the capital, the Government designated Engineer Yarisow Koonis Stadium as the appropriate venue for peaceful protest. Instead, the political mobilizers announced 22 separate protest locations across Mogadishu, an approach clearly intended to paralyze, disrupt, and fragment the city into clan zones rather than enable an orderly civic demonstration. This is not responsible political expression; it is an act of violent political mobilization that risks undermining the peace, security, and daily lives of the nearly four million residents of Mogadishu. The Government is also seriously concerned that the announced plan for five consecutive days of demonstrations across Mogadishu, together with the manner, scale, rhetoric, and organization of the planned activities, poses grave risks to public order, civilian safety, essential services, and the normal functioning of the capital. Security reports indicate that armed elements linked to or aligned with opposition actors have positioned themselves in different parts of the city, including densely populated civilian areas, creating a serious risk of exposing innocent communities to danger and using civilian spaces as clan zones to cover for political mobilization. The Government is further alarmed by recent public statements that appear to glorify confrontation rather than promote peaceful democratic engagement. In remarks he made, former President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed referred to the history of former warlord Sen. Abdiqeybdid surviving armed battles and reportedly assured him that he would also survive the "upcoming battle." Such language is deeply irresponsible, inconsistent with the spirit of peaceful protest, and risks encouraging supporters to view political activity as a battlefield rather than a lawful civic exercise. The concern of the Government is not peaceful expression. The concern is any attempt to convert lawful protest into intimidation, armed confrontation, disruption of public life, or pressure outside constitutional and democratic channels. No political group has the right to impose a multi-day paralysis on Mogadishu, endanger civilians, block essential roads, intimidate communities, or turn political disagreement into street confrontation. The Federal Government therefore has a constitutional and legal duty to protect public order, civilian life, public and private property, critical roads, emergency access routes, and the normal functioning of the capital city. The deployment of security forces is preventive and protective in nature. Security agencies have been instructed to act with restraint, professionalism, legality, and full respect for human rights, while clearly distinguishing peaceful citizens from any individuals who may seek to incite violence, carry weapons, damage property, obstruct essential routes, or provoke confrontation. The Government calls on all political actors to de-escalate their rhetoric, refrain from mobilizing armed supporters, respect public order requirements, and pursue political grievances through peaceful, constitutional, and institutional channels. The Federal Government remains fully committed to protecting democratic space while safeguarding the security, rights, and daily lives of all citizens, and it calls on community leaders, civil society, and international partners to support restraint, lawful conduct, dialogue, and respect for Somalia's constitutional order. ====END======

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